Protein isolates with reduced gossypol content from screw-pressed

Jun 1, 1993 - GEORGE N. LIADAKIS , CONSTANTINA TZIA , VASSILIKI OREOPOULOU , CHRISTOS D. THOMOPOULOS. Journal of Food Science 1998 63 ...
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J. Agrlc. Food Chem. 1993, 41, 918-922

Protein Isolates with Reduced Gossypol Content from Screw-Pressed Cottonseed Meal George N. Liadakis, Anastasios Floridis, Constantina Tzia,' and Vassiliki Oreopoulou Laboratory of Food Chemistry and Technology, Department of Chemical Engineering, National Technical University of Athens, 5 Iroon Polytechniou Street, Zografou, 15780 Athens, Greece

Gossypol was removed from commercial cottonseed meal by successive extractions with organic solvents. 1-Butanol hydrochloride was found the most suitable solvent, reducing the free gossypol content to the safe level of 0.0104% after three extractions. Protein isolates, with a protein content of 85%,were produced from raw and butanol-treated meals with yields of 50-80% based on extracted proteins. The isolates were light colored and had bland flavor. The butanol treatment influenced the protein isolation yield, lowering protein extractability, as confirmed by chromatographic analysis, but did not affect significantly the functional properties of the proteins.

INTRODUCTION Although cottonseed meal is a source of good quality protein (Martinez et al., 1970a), its utilization in human nutrition is limited by the presence of a toxic substance, gossypol (Berardi and Goldblatt, 1980). Gossypol has adverse physiological effects on nonruminants (Smith, 19701, and the interaction between proteins and gossypol during the processing of cottonseed has a deleterious effect on protein quality (Damaty and Hudson, 1979). According to FDA regulations, free gossypol content of edible grade cottonseed products should not exceed 0.045 9% (450 ppm). Great efforts have been devoted to devise practical methods for reducing the meal's gossypol content. The optimizing of the screw-press process by controlling the operating conditions leads to gossypol binding (Gizinos and Farmaki, 1985;Lusas and Jividen, 1987). In the case of the straight pressing, high pressure is applied and the nutritional value of meal is reduced because of protein denaturation. Other approaches have also been made to the gossypol problem. One is the development of glandless varieties of cottonseed in which the pigment glands have been genetically depleted (Martinez e t al., 1970b). A second is the development of process treatments that remove intact pigment glands without adversely affecting the protein fraction, namely air classification (Kadan e t al., 1979) and liquid cyclone process (LCP) (Vix et al., 1971; Gardner et al., 1976). A third employs the removal of gossypol by solvent extraction of cottonseed meal (Altschul et al., 1958). Many solvent extraction methods have been proposed by several workers, and a number of solvents and azeotropes have been used effectively. Aqueous acetone was used by Vaccarino (19611, by Pons and Eaves (1967), and, in combination with anhydrous acetone a t two stages, by Damaty and Hudson (1975). Furthermore, acetone-cyclohexane with or without water (Lawhon and Rao, 1967) and acetone-hexane-water azeotropes (King and Frampton, 1960) were used for extraction. Although acetone extraction produced cottonseed meal with low free gossypol content, it caused an objectionable flavor and odor of the meal (Alyevand et al., 1967). Acidic butanol treatment of cottonseed meal (Canella and Sodini, 1977) could remove gossypol without altering the protein quality, but the free gossypol level of the products was higher than the level permitted in cottonseed 002 1-85811931144 1-09 1a~o4.0010

products for food use. Dichloromethane could allow a larger reduction of free gossypol content (Cherry and Gray, 1981) with no adverse effect on the quality of the meal. 2-Propanol (or aqueous 2-propanol and 2-propanol-hexane mixture) was found to be an efficient solvent for extracting free gossypol (Rahma and Rao, 1984). Ethyl alcohol (aqueous or ethyl alcohol-hexane mixture) was also used in detoxification methods of cottonseed products (Liu et al., 1981; Hron and Koltun, 1984). In our country cottonseed meal is produced almost exclusively by straight screw-pressing after prolonged and drastic heat treatment, and the subsequent meal has a free gossypol content of 0.0343% and low quality (Gizinos and Farmaki, 1985). The objective of this work was to find the most suitable solvent among 1-butanol,2-propanol, and dichloromethane for the reduction of gossypol content from screw-pressed cottonseed meal, to produce low free gossypol protein isolates, and to study the effect of the solvent treatment on the quality of these products. MATERIALS AND METHODS Materials. The raw material was a commercial screw-pressed cottonseed cake, obtained from a local plant. Before crushing, the ground seed was subjected to a prolonged treatment with directly applied steam without prior dehulling and delintering. After pressing, the cake was dried at 120 O C . Cottonseed cake was ground in a blender mixer and defatted with hexane in a Soxhlet apparatusfor 8h. The defattedmaterial was dried at room temperature, ground in a laboratory mill, and screened through a 1-mmsieve; the passing fraction was used as starting cottonseed meal in our experiments. Analytical Methods. The cottonseed meal and the protein isolateswere analyzed for their proximate composition including moisture,ash, oil, and crude fiber contents with the AOAC (1984) methods. Protein content was determined according to the macro-Kjeldahl method ( % N X 6.25). Total sugars were measured according to the phenol-sulfuricacid method (Dubois et al., 1956) using glucose as standard. Free gossypol and total gossypol were determined according to AOCS (1986) Official Methods Ba 7-58 and Ba 8-78, respectively. Color measurements of the protein isolates were made with a Lovibond Tintometer Model E (TheTintometer Ltd., Saliibury, England) and of the solvent extraction filtrates with a Lovibond AOCS Tintometer (The Tintometer LM.). Solvent Extraction of Gossypol. Defatted cottonseed meal (20 g) was extracted with one of the followingsolvents l-butanol0.005 N HC1 (92:8 v/v), 2-propanol-0.005 N HC1 (92:8 v/v), or dichloromethane. Extractions were carried out at 25 O C for 30

0 1993 American Chemical Society

J. Agrlc. FoodChem., Vol. 41, No. 6, 1993

Cottonseed Protein Isolates

min at a meal-to-solvent ratio of 1:lO with stirring. The pH of the slurry was adjusted to 4.5 with 0.5 N HC1 and was kept constant during the extraction, except in the case of dichloromethane, where no pH adjustment was made. At the end of the treatment the suspension was filtered through Whatman No. 3 paper under vacuum. The filtrate color was measured, and the residue was dried at 40 "C under vacuum. Free gossypol and totalgossypolof treated meal were determined, and the extraction was repeated under the same conditionsuntil the gossypolcontent of the meal reached the permitted level. A larger scale experiment (100 g of meal in 1L of solvent) with the best solvent system selected was also conducted. The solid material resulting from this treatment was used in protein isolate preparations. Protein Isolate Preparation. Samples used for preparation of protein isolates include (i) meal without solvent extraction for gossypol removal and (ii) meal treated with the solvent which gave the highest gossypol removal. The preparation of protein isolates was carried out as follows: Cottonseedmeal (20g) was extracted with the extracting solutions at a meal-to-solution ratio of 1:20 (w/v) at 40 OC for 30 min with constant stirring. The protein was extracted with 0.1 N NaOH at pH 12 and with 0.5% NazSOs (w/v) at pH 11.5. During the extraction the pH of the suspension was kept constant by adjusting with 0.5 N HCl or 0.5 N NaOH. The suspension was centrifuged at 3800rpm for 10min and filtered through Whatman No. 3 paper. The extract was acidified with 0.5 N HC1until the isoelectric value was attained. The isoelectric point (PI)was determined as the pH value of maximal precipitation and was found to be 4.37. Protein isolates were prepared after centrifugation of the suspension at 3800 rpm for 10 min, washing the precipitate with 50% 2-propanol, and freeze-drying the washed precipitate. The solid fraction remaining after protein extraction was dried at 60 OC under vacuum and was used for protein determination. The results presented are the mean values of three trials. Water Absorption Capacity. Water absorption capacity (WAC)was determined accordingto a modified method of Rahma and Rao (1983): 6 mL of distilled water was added to 0.25 g of sample in a weighed 10-mLglass centrifuge tube. The tube was agitated on a Vortex mixer for 2 min and then centrifuged for 20 min at 3000 rpm. The supernatant was decanted and discarded. The tube was weighed after the removal of the adhering drops of water. WAC is expressed as the weight of water bound per 100 g of sample. Oil Absorption Capacity. Oil absorption capacity (OAC) was determined according to a modified method of Lin et al. (1974): 3 mL of refined corn oil was added to 0.5 g of sample in a graduated 10-mLglass centrifuge tube. The tube was agitated on a Vortex mixer for 1min, left for 30 min, and centrifuged for 20 min at 3000 rpm; the volume of free oil was read. OAC is expressed as the volume of oil absorbed per 100 g of sample. Soy protein isolate ISP 660 (BIOTREK S.A., Athens, Greece) was taken as reference for WAC and OAC measurements. Electrofocusing and Chromatographic Separation. Isoelectrofocusing (Pharmacia, 1982a) was carried out with Phast System (Pharmacia LKB Biotechnology,Uppsala, Sweden)using PhastGel IEF 3-9 media (homogeneous polyacrylamide gels containing Pharmalyte carrier ampholytes). For detecting proteins the Coomassie staining technique was used (PhastGel Blue R). Chromatographic analysis was carried out on a Waters 650 advanced protein purification system (Millipore, Milford, MA) with a Chromatofocusing kit (Pharmacia LKB Biotechnology). A column (1 X 10 cm) packed with Polybuffer exchanger PBE 94, equilibrated with starting buffer (0.025 M imidazole hydrochloride, pH 7) was used and eluted with Polybuffer 74 hydrochloride adjusted to pH 4 (Pharmacia,1982b). Monitoring of protein content was done by a single-path monitor UV-1 (Pharmacia LKB Biotechnology) at 280 nm. Sample collection was carried out with a programmable fraction collector FRAC300 (PharmaciaLKB Biotechnology)adjusted to collectsamples in separate tubes every 1 min. The pH of each sample was measured by a pH-meter equipped with a small-size electrode. The samples of NaOH and Na2SOs extracts, used for chromatographic analysis, contained 1.3-2.8 mg of protein/mL of

010

Table I. Proximate Composition of the Cottonseed Cake, Meal, and 1-Butanol-Treated Meal (Percent. DITBasis) ~~

moisture protein oil

ash

crude fiber total sugars

cake 6.4 26.8

meal 5.8 32.1

1.1

0.8

4.9 34.6 5.1

5.6 27.3 5.3

treated meal 6.1 32.1 0.9 5.4 28.7 4.1

extract. The samples of the isolate proteins were dissolved in 0.015 N NaOH at a concentration 0.3-0.8mg of protein/mL. The protein content was determined accordingto the method of Lowry et al. (1951). For rapid desalting and buffer exchange of the samples Pharmacia PD-10 columnswere used which contained Sephadex G-25 medium in distilled water. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

The proximate compositions of the cottonseed cake and of the meal used as starting material in experiments are shown in Table I. T h e raw cake had high crude fiber content because of the presence of hulls and linters. The protein content of raw material was not very high (26.8% on a dry basis), and for this reason an enrichment by screening was tried, so that the starting material had a protein content of 32.1 % For the gossypol removal from cottonseed meal the extracting procedure was based on the method of Canella and Sodini (1977). The major modifications were in the meal-to-solvent ratio and in the extraction time, which were 1 : l O and 30 min instead of 1:20 and 15 min, respectively. This selection of the extraction conditions was made on the assumption that the same reduction of gossypol content could be attained by a lower number of extractions. In addition to 1-butanol, 2-propanol and dichloromethane were also used as extracting media. All extractions were conducted at the isoelectric pH (4.37) of proteins to minimize dissolution of the proteins in the solvents. Table I1 shows how the free and total gossypol contents were lowered with each one of the three solvents. 1-Butan01 was the most effective extracting solvent for free gossypol removal, which amounted to 80% by two extractions. These results were in good agreement with and in some cases even better than those found in the literature for similar procedures (Canella and Sodini, 1977). The gossypol extraction by 2-propanol was sufficient enough, while dichloromethane would not be suggested as it removed only 33% of free gossypol after four successive extractions. I n addition to the large reduction of free gossypol, solvent extraction reduced markedly the bound gossypol content. It must be also noted that a larger proportion of the total gossypol was removed during the first extraction; on the contrary, for the free gossypol, each extraction removed almost equal proportions. The results were in accordance with the color of the filtrates from the successive extractions with the three different solvents as shown in Table 11. The protein content of the meal after the last extraction showed no significant difference and was 33.8%, 30.1% and 31.6% for 1-butanol, 2-propanol, and dichloromethane, respectively. The color of the butanol-extractedmeal was slightly lighter than that of the meal extracted by the other solvents. On the basis of the obtained results 1-butanol was selected to produce cottonseed meal for use in protein isolate preparation. Although an acceptable free gossypol level was achieved by two extractionswith 1-butanol(Table 111, one additional extraction step was added for greater

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920 J. Agrlc. Food Chem., Voi. 41, No. 6, 1993

Liadakis et al.

Table 11. Effect of Solvent Extractions on the Gossypol Content of Cottonseed Meal (Dry Basis) free gossypol, % total gossypol, % solvent none 1-butanol first extraction second extraction 2-propanol first extraction second extraction third extraction dichloromethane first extraction second extraction third extraction fourth extraction

content 0.0971

removal

content 1.2905

removal

Lovibond color of filtrate

0.0455 0.0190

53.1 80.4

1.0131 0.9422

21.5 27.0

1OY 0.3R 4Y

0.0457 0.0260 0.0137

52.9 73.2 85.9

0.9698 0.9136 0.8321

24.9 29.2 35.5

5Y 2Y 1Y

0.0732 0.0686 0.0679 0.0649

24.6 29.4 30.1 33.2

0.9534 0.9177 0.8654 0.8345

26.1 28.9 32.9 35.3

5Y 2.1R 1Y 0.1R